The Titanic stamp clock is also published in the form of a black print

On
13 April 2012 Magyar Posta issued a special stamp block in
commemoration of the Titanic and dr. Árpád Lengyel, surgeon of the
British steamship Carpathia, which was the first one to arrive to the
rescue of the Titanic. On 15 October 2012 the representative publication
will also be issued in the form of a black print. The main motif of the
serial numbered black print, which has a format completely identical to
that of the stamp block except for its colour, is the Titanic moving
towards the iceberg, and parts of the ship are shown on the perforated
pictures. On the top right part of the frame drawing the portrait of dr.
Árpád Lengyel and the contours of the steamship Carpathia can be seen.
The special feature of the publication is that the offset printing
process was supplemented with raised printing.

The Titanic was
built at the Harland and Wolff shipyard in Belfast, Northern Ireland,
and when it sunk it was the largest passenger liner in the world. She
left the port of Southampton on 10 April 1912 with 2,207 passengers on
board. Several ice warnings were received on the evening before the
disaster, but some of them did not even reach the bridge because of the
high volume of telegrams. Although the Titanic was the largest and most
elegant vessel on the Transatlantic route, she was not the fastest,
which jeopardised the planned arrival in New York on 16 April 1912. It
was one of the reasons why she did not slow down or why she did not
avoid the area with drifting ice. At 23.40 p.m. on 14 April the lookout
spotted a floating iceberg.

The first officer on duty ordered the
ship to be steered to the left and the left propeller to be put in
reverse. A long time passed before the gigantic Titanic slowly began to
turn slowly, and so the iceberg scraped all along the right side of the
ship causing fatal damage in the hull. The captain ordered to send out
SOS distress signals, and rescue preparations were started. RMS
Carpathia received the signals but was too far from the scene to offer
immediate help. The Titanic sank at 2.20 am on 15 April. About 75
minutes later the Carpathia brought aboard people from the lifeboats.
Some of the Hungarian passengers on board of the Titanic survived the
tragedy, such as Mátyás Reischl, a waiter working for one of the first
class restaurants, and Hungarian immigrants Lujza Hoffer, Antal Kisik
and his wife. The surgeon of the British steamship Carpathia coming to
the rescue of the Titanic was dr. Árpád Lengyel, who did his best to
save the survivors on the verge of hypothermia. He received a
commemorative medal from them as a token of their gratitude. His grave
is in the Kerepesi Cemetery in Budapest. (Source: hu.wikipedia.org)